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from the SPU Falcon

Forum bids TC3 guests farewell

For Owen Sallee, Tent City 3’s presence on campus was an opportunity to form relationships by learning and growing together.

Sallee, coordinator for global and urban involvement at the John
Perkins Center, actively participated in hosting the encampment during
their 2012 stay at Seattle Pacific University and again this year.

He describes TC3’s second stay as a success.

“SPU has learned some things from Tent City 3,” he said.

TC3 moved in on Dec. 13, 2014, and stayed for 90 days. On Saturday, March 7, they moved to Shoreline Free Methodist Church.

On March 5, roughly 110 students, faculty, staff and TC3 residents
gathered in Seattle Pacific’s SUB Gazebo Room for the final TC3 forum
titled, “What We Learned: Debriefing and Next Steps.”

“We want to talk about things we’ve done, things we’ve learned
together and ways that this has been a joint effort,” Sallee said.

A short video about SPU’s experience with TC3 was shared during the
forum to raise further awareness. The video featured interviews with
various SPU leaders and students, as well as TC3 residents.
“We’ll share [the video] with places like University of Washington and
say this is why you should host Tent City 3,” Sallee said.

For Vice President of Student Life Jeff Jordan, hosting TC3 was a
student initiative and something he sees has a hallmark of SPU.

“Our students get involved, and they have places they can go to make a
difference, and so this is one of those places where they came and said
we want to do something,” Jordan said in the video.

President Daniel Martin, who spoke at the forum, addressed those in attendance and expanded on his experience with TC3.

“You’ve enriched our lives. You’ve enriched our understanding about
the complexities of homelessness and the various ways that we can
engage,” he said to the TC3 residents present.

Martin emphasized that the conversation about homelessness shouldn’t end with TC3’s departure.

“We want to discover ways individually and corporately that we can
work together,” Martin said. “As we said on the video, this is a topic
and an issue that we’ve got to keep in front of our community.”

Martin also said that it is important for SPU to follow up on its
mission statement of “engaging the culture and changing the world.”

“We can’t engage unless we understand, and [TC3 has] helped us bring
an understanding and an awareness and education to this community,” he
said. “Now it’s our responsibility to act and move forward in ways that
Christ has called and gifted us to do in a variety of different ways.”

After Martin spoke, attendees shared their experiences over the past three months.

“For me, even before Tent City 3, it all kind of began with [Dr.
Karen Snedker’s] class Homelessness in America,” senior Terrell Kelly
said.

“I think just treating someone as you would treat another person…or
just carrying a conversation, brings a sense that you care about someone
as a person.”

Kelly said he hoped having TC3 on campus would enable students to carry their experiences beyond school.

“I hope that when we see people on the street that we engage them, or
when they come up to us we’re more conscious and polite about their
trials and tribulations,” Kelly said. “They’re just human beings like
us.”

TC3 Camp adviser Roger Franz echoed Kelly’s statements.

Franz said the TC3 and SPU communities learned a lot from one another despite previous misconceptions on both sides.

“I think part of the reason we like to come to universities is we get to shape the lives of 3,500 people,” Franz said.

from KPLU.org

At SPU, Students And Tent City Residents Bond Over Poetry

With homelessness on the rise, colleges now offer classes on the
subject. At Seattle Pacific University, hosting a tent city easily
integrates students with campers in the classroom.

But students
there have taken that relationship a step further. At a recent poetry
slam, barriers between campers and college kids dissolved.

Monique
Vandenbroucke is a sophomore studying psychology at SPU. Every
Wednesday, she cruises through Tent City 3, which is temporarily located
in the heart of campus. She invites campers to join students in writing
and sharing poetry.

On a recent night, it was a circle of 12, split almost evenly between students and campers. Jim Ketcham is a regular.

“Yeah, it’s a challenge, to share at that level, but it’s also exciting. It’s creative, and a good release,” Ketcham said.

Writing
poetry is what helped Vandenbrouke through some of her own struggles
with mental health. She and tent city resident Anthony Velarde noodled
with his words.

“You may think I’m high/Until you look me in the eye/But it’s no lie/That I’m just bi/Polar … lost my words,” Velarde said.

Soon
the feedback session morphed into exchanges about personal struggles. A
camper drew a picture of her dream home with places for her kids to
play. Students talked about theology classes and attempts to understand
the divine.

Tent City has just one week left at SPU, and campers
and students are wondering whether they’ll be able to stay in
touch. Vandenbrouke would like to keep sharing poetry but isn’t sure if
it will happen.

“I don’t know. I mean, that’s part of the sad and scary part about Tent City: What’s next?” she said.

A city run by residents, TC3’s distinct self-management style

Chris Yang/THE FALCON Tent City 3 (TC3) relies on self-management among residents like Jeff Roderick to handle day-to-day needs of the encampment.

Tent City 3 (TC3) is just what it sounds like: a self-contained city.
What is distinct about this encampment of homeless individuals is its
self-management.

During their weekly Monday night meetings, TC3 members assign new
staff positions and discuss how to manage and implement new rules.

Tony Rinehart, a resident of the camp, compares TC3’s lawmaking
process to the passing of government bills and TC3 residents to the U.S.
House of Representatives and Senate.

“Everything has to be voted on. It has to be actually motioned,
seconded and passed in order for anything to go into effect,” Rinehart
says. “[However] for us, it goes to the camp…We make our own decisions.
When we put a rule into effect…the majority has to agree.”

According to Rinehart, the democratic foundation of the camp illustrates the way campers want to live.

“Because that means everybody has a voice. You know, we have a
saying, ‘nothing about us without us,’” Rinehart says. “So, lot of
people say, ‘I don’t want to go to a meeting.’ I say, ‘You don’t want to
miss a meeting because that’s where everything’s decided at.’”

Though TC3 currently depends on Seattle Pacific and the SHARE/WHEEL
organization for basic needs like food, electricity and water, TC3
resident and current executive committee member Jeff Rodrick says the
community works hard to maintain itself.

“We have gracious hosts who have done enormous things for us,
providing electricity and water, for example, for the shower in our
camp,” Rodrick says.

According to senior Heather Bean, student liaison for TC3, there is minimal outside help aside from the basics.

“Tent City is a self-managed camp. There’s a representative from
SHARE who comes through and will help with administrative stuff, like
he’ll print out the agendas for the Monday night meetings,” Bean says.
“[Otherwise] it works a lot with election. They’re really democratic,
not particularly efficient, but that way they’re always fair.”

Lantz Rowland, a TC3 camper who has held staff positions in the past,
says all residents have a part in managing the workings of the camp.

“The misnomer about saying ‘part of the management’ is in self-management, everyone’s a part of the management,” Rowland says.

According to Rowland, all members of the camp are equally important
in the Monday meetings, and all are in charge of making the decisions.

“The rules and regulations are set by us, managed by us, enforced by us,” Rowland says.

Rodrick explains the reason the campers decided on this method of
governing because it allows them to take control of their living space
and make it their own.

“This is our camp. This isn’t somebody else’s camp. We have to follow
their rules, although there are certain guidelines set aside by
SHARE/WHEEL organization,” Rodrick says. “We hold our meetings. We elect
the officials who are going to govern us, so it’s all up to us.”

According to Rodrick, TC3 has become homeless people’s only safe haven from Seattle’s cold streets.

Chris Yang/THE FALCON
Residents of TC3 volunteer for security shifts, such as standing guard
at the entrance, as part of the encampment’s self-management.

“Tent City is one of the most important facilities for homeless
people there is. They can keep their belongings, and we have security
here to make sure it’s safe,” Rodrick says. “I don’t have to push a
shopping cart with everything I own…We have showers here. We have clean
clothes.”

According to Rodrick, the democratic environment of TC3 does more
than simply give the residents a means of governing themselves. It helps
create a sense of community.

“We’re safe here…We’re all individuals on the same level, all trying
to better [ourselves], get a place to live and get out of this,” Rodrick
says. “It’s cold, it’s wet…But it’s much safer than to be out in the
street in a doorway, freezing. We have shelter.”

Rinehart adds being involved includes speaking up when you have a problem with the way camp is running.

Printed in the Issaquah Press

Tent City 4 stay eases Faith United fears

June 10, 2014

By Peter Clark

Faith United Methodist Church’s volatile decision to host Tent City 4 changed a lot of minds, church leaders said as the traveling homeless shelter moved to its next site May 31.

After leaving Sammamish’s Mary, Queen of Peace in January, Tent City 4 set up for an emergency 30-day stay in Lake Sammamish State Park with the approval of the state. With options running low, the regional shelter petitioned for Faith United, located near the Klahanie neighborhood, to host the encampment.

“We kind of had to scramble to get things together, which we did,” Pastor John Brewer said. “After we got out in front of it, the experience itself of hosting Tent City 4 has gone very, very well. It went really without incident.”

Although eight arrests occurred during Tent City 4’s stay at Mary, Queen of Peace, Brewer said none occurred at Faith United.

The church’s congregation and the neighboring community met the matter with charged emotions when Brewer introduced it to them in a February informational meeting.

Of particular concern was the proximity of Tent City 4 to the church’s preschool. A group of parents openly expressed anger and threatened to remove their children from the school.

At the time, school Director Kathryn Aitcheson estimated that if the school lost 30 students, it could not afford operational costs.

After 60 days of parental patrols around the perimeter of the camp and active volunteering duties to provide meals to Tent City 4 inhabitants, Aitcheson said the school remains.

“It wasn’t that big of an impact that it could have been,” she said and mentioned ways in which the school also benefitted. “It actually allowed a chance to get teachers and parents together here. It was a win-win.”

The school did not escape unscathed. Aitcheson said that 14 students did leave. She said many, if not most, were because of Tent City 4’s arrival.

The school’s Parent Advisory Team, led by Lisa Deily, voiced great hesitation of welcoming Tent City 4 at February’s meeting. She expressed concerns about exposing the young children to homelessness. After the camp left, however, she felt the church’s involvement with Tent City 4 led to a growth opportunity for the whole community.

“As a parent body, we all feel that the kids weren’t even aware of Tent City 4,” Deily said. “The teachers did a really good job of keeping it age appropriate. I think that speaks volumes of the preschool.”

She said the opportunity offered everyone a chance to more honestly communicate worries and hopes for their children as well as develop bonds.

“It really did strengthen our preschool community,” Deily said. “This had people talking and people getting to know each other a lot better through this. It was a challenge, but it was a growing experience in the long run.”

Aitcheson agreed.

“It polarizes you, but then it brings you all together,” she said.

Residents staying in the shelter gave high praise to the church for the hospitality offered by its community.

“I’ve been with Tent City 4 for over a year now and that was the best host I’ve had,” shelter resident Terry Debell said. “Those people went all out.”

Representatives from Tent City 4 leadership offered testimony and assurances from past experiences with hosts during the community meeting. Debell said anxiety of first-time hosts was common.

“The neighbors are hesitant and I understand it,” he said. “But we left in their good graces and that’s the way we want it. By the end, they miss us.”

He said he would have loved to stay, but “60 days is 60 days.”

“They were so generous and super nice,” Debell said of Faith United’s treatment. “I’ve been in a lot of encampments, and that’s the best.”

Brewer remained extremely positive about the school, the congregation and the surrounding community.

“I have to say the surrounding community has been so supportive,” he said. “It was a successful mission of outreach. We would certainly consider hosting again.”

Tent City 4 settled into its new location, Bellevue’s Temple B’Nai Torah, June 1.

Printed in the Highline Times

Tent City 3 homeless encampment keeps an eye out on its own, & on Tukwila neighborhood, it says

Tent City 3, the homeless encampment of 100 adult men and women, plus a few cats and dogs, put down stakes last August at Riverton Park United Methodist Church, 3118 S 140th St., Tukwila, where it will remain until November 17, its official 3-month allotment. It will then relocate to a different church in the Seattle area.

Like Tent City 4, its Eastside cousin, Tent City 3 is sponsored by the 501(c)(3) organizations Seattle Housing and Resources Effort (SHARE) and Women's Housing Equality and Enhancement League (WHEEL).

According to Wikipedia, "The original Tent City and Tent City 2, both created in the late 1990s, were created illegally and opposed by the City of Seattle. After being tolerated for some time, they were eventually forced to shut down."

The other tent city, Nickelsville, is located in a West Seattle industrial area adjacent to its Highland Park neighborhood, and has remained there for 16 months and counting. Unlike the other encampments, Nickelsville accepts children. However, Tent City 3 has 20 emergency overflow beds, in addition to its capacity of 100, and says it will not turn away teen runaways in the short term. It will also help those under 18 find shelter and other services if they turn up at its entrance.

Tent City resident, Andy:

Tent City 3 resident, Andy, 37, spoke with the Highline Times while on desk duty at the entrance. The ex-Marine is from Richmond, VA., and said other veterans live at the encampment, mostly Army.

"This is a 'participation camp', so we have security 24 hours a day," he said. "Someone is on the desk 24 hours a day, and we rotate with two residents on three-hour shifts, 24 hours a day who walk through the neighborhoods in a two block radius and watch for anything that happens. We keep a folder and write anything suspicious we see in the neighborhood. A lot of people see a stigma of encampments. We have zero tolerance for drugs, alcohol, violence. There is no loitering in the neighborhood, and only one entrance. I know everybody coming in and going.

"About 25-percent of our residents work part time," said Andy, who has a background in construction including project manager and superintendent. "A large percentage is on SSI ( Social Security Supplemental Security Income) which is so low now they can't afford housing. Then you've got some with mental and physical issues where they can't seem to hold a job. Some just lost a job, and are looking, or are going to school.

"We send out letters asking a church if they will consider hosting us," he said. We like to know the next site ahead of time of course. We don't ask for anything from the church other than the use of their land. We've stayed at this church a couple of times. They are nice people."

Tent City 3 often returns to the same churches, creating a somewhat dependable cycle. These include St. Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral on Capitol Hill, Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Shoreline, and Haller Lake United Methodist Church at 1st Av. NE and 130th.

Tent City 3 hosted by SPU:

They were hosted by Seattle Pacific University in January and stayed until March, unusual for a college. In an article by Mike Wold for Real Change, the weekly street newspaper, he quotes a homeless advocate who sites the encampment as a win-win both for its residents, and for SPU students...

“The most important thing was that it broke down barriers,” said Owen Sallee, coordinator of the Global and Urban Involvement program. “There’s a difference between serving meals at a shelter where you don’t eat with the guests and sitting down with people and getting to know them. You find out that they’re not really that different from you. The differences are often no greater than the differences you might find with some of the people in your dorm.”

Real Change newspaper founder Timothy Harris:

"I think one of the main attractions with the tent cities is that they have a peer management and peer support model that is less demeaning than most shelter," Real Change Founding Director Timothy Harris told the Highline Times. "They offer more flexibility, and in some respects better conditions in terms of personal security and crowding. The sense of safety comes out of the sense of community, which is absent in most large urban shelter settings.

"I think for most people, housing would be much preferable to tent cities, but given the scarcity there that's a very theoretical choice," he added. "It's well known that homeless people who once had community in a shelter setting, and then get into housing and find themselves relatively isolated don't do very well and sometimes become homeless again. Some housing programs get that, and work to create a sense of community. But that's what people get in the tent cities, I think, that some are afraid they'd lose in housing."Tent City 3 residents Alan and Jennifer:

Tent City 3 residents Alan and Jennifer share a 10' X 16' tent provided by the encampment. Alan, 43, grew up in Tukwila not far from his current digs, and graduated from Foster High School there.

"This is not exactly how I wanted to move back to the neighborhood, but, OK," said Alan. "I'm unable to work due to physical disabilities, asthma, a steel plate in neck, lower back troubles. I lived with my (ex) wife and three kids six years ago. I had my kids eight months and I just wasn't able to function. Things spiraled, and I lived on and off with girlfriends, friends, until I ended up with nothing. I took a look at tent city. I liked what I saw.

"It is real, every day people who are here," he said. "It's not people who are always unwilling to work. You're one paycheck away (from homelessness), without a doubt. Sometimes circumstances snowball."

"I came up here from the Bay Area to be with my ex-husband and we broke up," said Jennifer. "I stayed and he left. I feel safer here than the other options, like being on the street, or in a shelter. There are no strangers allowed. There is security here and people don't steal. Everybody here watches out for each other."

Tent City 3 accepts donations onsite and offers a "Wish List" here. They are gearing up for the cold and rain and request winter clothes and blankets.